Cell Reports (Nov 2014)

Systematic Perturbation of Cytoskeletal Function Reveals a Linear Scaling Relationship between Cell Geometry and Fitness

  • Russell D. Monds,
  • Timothy K. Lee,
  • Alexandre Colavin,
  • Tristan Ursell,
  • Selwyn Quan,
  • Tim F. Cooper,
  • Kerwyn Casey Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.10.040
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 1528 – 1537

Abstract

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Diversification of cell size is hypothesized to have occurred through a process of evolutionary optimization, but direct demonstrations of causal relationships between cell geometry and fitness are lacking. Here, we identify a mutation from a laboratory-evolved bacterium that dramatically increases cell size through cytoskeletal perturbation and confers a large fitness advantage. We engineer a library of cytoskeletal mutants of different sizes and show that fitness scales linearly with respect to cell size over a wide physiological range. Quantification of the growth rates of single cells during the exit from stationary phase reveals that transitions between “feast-or-famine” growth regimes are a key determinant of cell-size-dependent fitness effects. We also uncover environments that suppress the fitness advantage of larger cells, indicating that cell-size-dependent fitness effects are subject to both biophysical and metabolic constraints. Together, our results highlight laboratory-based evolution as a powerful framework for studying the quantitative relationships between morphology and fitness.